Gabry89 said:
then how would you get the Req? and why if i consider them in series for calculating Req the result is correct?
In your calculations, you multiply by R
eq to find V
AB and then later divide by it to find I
3, so it ends up canceling out.
You used
V_{AB} = R_{\mathrm{eq}} J
followed by
V_{R_3R_4} = V_{AB} \left(\frac{R_3 || R_4}{R_{\mathrm{eq}}}\right) = R_{\mathrm{eq}} J \left(\frac{R_3 || R_4}{R_{\mathrm{eq}}}\right) = J(R_3 || R_4)
You could have used any value of R
eq and gotten the correct answer. Note that your final answer turns out to be
I_3 = \frac{R_4}{R_3+R_4} J
Do you recognize that formula?
For two elements to be in series, all the current that goes through one element must go through the other. That's certainly not true for the pair R
1 and R
2 nor for the pair R
3, which carries 7 A, and R
4, which, by KCL, must carry 9 A.
In series, elements are connected end-to-end with nothing else connected the nodes. With R
1 and R
2, they're connected both on the left and right ends. Since both nodes have other circuit elements connected to them, R
1 and R
2 are not in series.
On another note, you have R
5 in parallel with a short circuit when you remove the voltage source. What's the equivalent resistance of that combination?